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[W695.Ebook] Ebook The Reenchantment of Art, by Suzi Gablik

Ebook The Reenchantment of Art, by Suzi Gablik

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The Reenchantment of Art, by Suzi Gablik

The Reenchantment of Art, by Suzi Gablik



The Reenchantment of Art, by Suzi Gablik

Ebook The Reenchantment of Art, by Suzi Gablik

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The Reenchantment of Art, by Suzi Gablik

Confronts the effects of modernism on society and proposes a remedy based on a redefinition of our art and culture

  • Sales Rank: #762427 in Books
  • Published on: 1995-09-01
  • Released on: 1995-09-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.25" h x .49" w x 6.00" l, .79 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 216 pages

From Kirkus Reviews
One of the livelier critics of the contemporary art scene (Has Modernism Failed?, 1984--not reviewed) tries to trace the roots of the present crisis in aesthetics and to map out some ways of escape. Gablik's thesis is not original. ``Since the Enlightenment,'' she maintains, ``our view of what is real has been organized around the hegemony of a technological and materialist world view...we no longer have any sense of having a soul.'' Spirituality and ritual have been the first casualties of this attitude, but the most profound reordering, Gablick says, has occurred in the area of social relations, as the spread of individualistic philosophies has weakened or destroyed the cohesion of traditional communal structures--leading to the modern artist understanding his or her vocation in terms of the objects created rather than the audience addressed. If the artist has any awareness of the audience at all, it is usually seen as a hostile force to be either ignored or shocked (this is the lesson Gablik draws from Richard Serra's Tilted Arc controversy). What is needed, we are told, is an aesthetics of ``interaction and connection,'' in which the artist works to restore the lost harmony between humanity and earth, and to override the alienation of race, sex, and class. At this point Gablik's argument falls into New Age obscurantism and is weakened further in that most of the exemplars of her approach (sculptors who design carts for the homeless, photographers who document toxic-waste dumping, etc.) sound more like social workers or advocacy lawyers than artists. A valuable analysis that brings forth incredible conclusions. Gablick has apparently fallen into a deconstructionist vocabulary that allows her to play fast-and-loose with concepts of ``art'' and ``creation,'' resulting in a confusion little better than the one she set out to overcome. (Thirty-two illustrations.) -- Copyright �1991, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

Most helpful customer reviews

27 of 29 people found the following review helpful.
Art for ecological action.
By Luke Deacon
The Reenchantment of Art is a passionate plea for artists to reacess the thought and practice of a century of modernism. Gablick`s earlier book, 'Conversations before the end of time' was a collection on interviews and discussions with critical thinkers on environmental issues. The Reenchantment of Art refines the issues raised in the interviews of the earlier book toward a contemporary art focus. It speaks against individualist thought in art making, pointing artists toward new possibilties in art practice.
Using examples of environmental artists, Gablick provides insights into new working methods of important contemporary artists. These artists are using their creative abilty to ammend the destruction of modern society by engaging in art practices that give 'something worthwhile' back to the earth and its people.
Environmental art is of critical importance in this next century. Gablick`s book shapes the foundation of perhaps the most important movement in contemporary art theory.

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
Helps re-establish the web of interdependence upon which our lives hinge
By Green Stone
Those with eyes to see and hearts that can still feel, can readily see that the one thing we need most, if we are to save ourselves and our planet from collapse under our appalling and arrogant abuse of nature, is to re-establish ourselves in the web of interdependent relationships with each other, the earth, and all natural and spiritual beings. Suzi Gablik's vision in this book is in line with this healing vision, which after all, represents art as it was at the dawn of time: ancient art was healing art, magical art, connected art, folk and naive art.

With increasing "civilization" , Gablik points out, art has lost its magical, mythical and earth-derived power: its power to enchant. Any person with "common" sense, which is an earthy sense, can see that where the art world stands now is often so idiotic: as Gablik points out so well, art has capitulated to the forces of the marketplace, and idiots gleefully delight in the way their commodity-art provides a nice income for them, because the who's-who's of the capitalist corporate marketplace just love that art too has become a prostitute to their greed and lust for power and wealth. Those who want to do meaningful art need not to become prostitutes, and Gablik's book points the way to the older ways of art, which, just like the older, Pagan ways of religion, ironically emerge as part of the vision of the needed way forward.

Two areas where Gablik's vision for art could be expanded, areas she didn't explore as fully as might be explored: the benefits that can be gained from viewing the role art played in the most ancient societies, the Paleolithic Goddess statuary and cave paintings, the shamanic aspect of art, and thus the link of art with various "Pagan" religious/spiritual orientations. Here lies enormous meaning. In this direction too, we can contemplate that as art returns to its archaic roots in search of meaning, the distinction between "professional" artists and folk or naive artists, will very likely diminish, and this is something Gablik makes no mention of.

It is evidence of a lack of both social and psychological integration, that any society, rather than viewing EVERYONE as capable of creative work, and calling us to it, prefers to "project" its own creativity onto an "elite" group, which performs this necessary function, presumably for others, though this elite has done so since the early 20th century with varying degrees of contempt for and disengagement from those others. An astute observer could read behind this contempt, the natural result of psychological splitting. No one in their depth is really satisfied with a situation where "we" create for "you", because you all refuse to take the responsibility to awaken to your own creativity. If you shove off your creativity onto us, naturally we will eventually become contemptous of you. Thus we can understand the contempt and arrogance of modern art as a predictable result of an unhealthy psychological and social situation.

In ancient times, art was not the exclusive province of some highly trained elite corps. It was done by the plain "folk." The value of one simple, untrained individual now striving, against all cultural programming, to create something with pen or paint or clay out of a vital and real NEED, is an act of a far more profound significance and touching pathos than 99% of the idiot trash created by a self-indulgent and cynical, snobby and increasingly irrelevant "art elite." Many have written on the spiritual and psychological significance of the PROCESS of art, wholly apart from the PRODUCT that may be produced: MIchell Cassou, Pat Allen, and Joanna Field and many others. The emergence of a new vision of art which is inclusive of the efforts of plain common people to paint their world out of a vital psychological and/or social need, is of enormous value for the future.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
Inspirational
By reader
This book really got me to question why we need art, and what roll art plays in society today. I would recommend it to anyone who wants to learn how to discover hope in a seemingly dark word. It helped me to realize that art influences, and that we should let art influence us.
"When did it happen, that working with kids became a saintly, do-gooder thing? It's a basic duty of society. The reason the kids are running wild is that no one is there for them." Rollins (108)

"Cultural myths do not die easily, especially when our personal commitment to them is so strong that it is difficult even to entertain explanations of possibilities based upon different premises... Our cultural myths support economic advancement and the hard edged individualist writ large, rather than service, caring attitudes and participation. Though certain individuals are exploring and implementing more communal values, others have not shifted their understanding in this way and may not wish to. For them, art remains a question of radical autonomy." (116)

"When someone seriously questions the accepted way things are done suggesting a new approach, the person may trigger anxiety in others. This anxiety may be turned against the innovator in the form of anger." Carol Becker (116)

"One of the peculiar developments in our Western world is that we are losing our sense of the divine side of life, of the power of imagination... without the magical sense of perception, we do not live in a magical world." (42)

"Negative images have a way of coming alive just as positive images have. If we project images of beauty, hope, healing, courage, survival, cooperation, interrelatedness, serenity, imagination and harmony, this will have a positive effect. Imagine what artists could do if they became committed to the long-term good of the planet. The possibilities are beyond imagination. If all artist would ever pull together for the survival of humankind, it would be a power such as the world has never known" (155)

"Community, as it is being enacted here, is the ability to touch others in ways that matter to them-to give them a voice." (105)

"Our psychic "entrancement" with industrialism is what is pre-still continue to believe it is the necessary condition for our survival, even when its desolating effects have become so obvious, and we perceive the basic life-support systems closing down under its assaults." (93)

"The experience begins with a feeling, a sense of something that wants to materialize itself... What the world lacks today is not so much knowledge of these things of the spirit as experience of them. Experiencing the spirit is all. To believe is okay, but a personal experience is better, a direct feeling with something" Shaffer (44)

"Obviously, how we see the future has everything to do with how we live in the present. For the first time in recorded history, the certainty that there will be a future has been lost; this is the pivotal psychological reality of our time. According to the French social philosopher Jean Baudrillard, there is no future. Everything has become "nuclear, faraway, vaporized"; and the ending of the possibilities for art merely reflects the more general ending of reality itself. Since everything has already been wiped off the map, Baudrillard finds it useless to hope, or to dream. In an amazing essay called "The Anorexic Ruins," Baudrillard claims that the great artistic visions were those of the years from 1920 to 1930. Since everything has been done already, today we are only inferior imitators. Intrinsic values have been replaced by simulated, synthetic values. "The maximum in intensity lies behind us," he states. "The minimum in passion and intellectual inspiration lie before us." Quite simply, according to Baudrillard, there is no life any longer in our societies, although the vital functions continue. One comes to an arrangement with the situation; reciprocal indifference is negotiated." (19)

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